domenica 7 aprile 2013

Minimal GNOME Video Player ‘Snappy’ Hits 0.3, Improves Feature Set

Does Linux really need yet another video player? Probably not. But is it cool to have yet another anyway? For sure!
To be fair to Snappy,
an open-source Gstreamer-powered media player designed for the GNOME
desktop, it has been chomping about for several years, albeit without
gaining much in the way of attention.

But with its first release in almost two years, Snappy 0.3 suddenly has a lot more bite.
The app is no longer confined to being launched through a terminal;
is no longer lacking a logo (see new icon to the right); and is no
longer missing key media player features like subtitles support and
media queuing,

It’s also been given some much needed visual polish. And I do mean
much needed. Its Clutter-based UI may have been free from
visual clutter, but it it was, shall we say, a little unripened…

Snappy 0.2 – Not Quite Ripe

Two years on from that 0.2 release, Snappy has matured. A lot.

Snappy 0.3 Playing a Video. Image: luisbg

The OSD (On Screen Display), has been refined, darkened, and sees
flat monochromatic icons introduced; and a stack of new features have
been added, including:

Drag and drop video opening

Subtile support

Desktop launcher

Multi-screen full-screen

Media queues

A raft of changes that could see Snappy start biting at the ankles of more established video players…

Getting Snappy 0.3

Snappy 0.2 is available to install through the Ubuntu Software Center in 11.10 through 13.04.
Getting this latest release, 0.3, is a little tricker. At present the
only way to get it in Ubuntu is to build it from source. You’ll need to
grab a stack of dependencies before attempting.

For the more patient amongst you, I would expect to see Snappy 0.3
added to one of the various GNOME 3 PPAs in the not-so-distant future.
We’ll be sure to give you a heads-up when this happens.In the meantime, feel free to share your own video player preferences, needs and annoyances in the comment space below…